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Dec 1, 2012
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in spain, 26% were one in two young people is out of work. things are not quite that grim in italy, but more and more young people are looking for work. the youth unemployment rate is 36%, the highest since june 2004. >> we have to take a short break, but when we back, december 1 is world aids day. we will be taking a look at the problem of hiv/aids. >> and what is germany going to do with all its nuclear waste? stay with us for that. >> thanks for staying with us. >> welcome back. one of the consequences of the breakdown of public services in the wake of the economic crisis in greece is a sharp spike up people they're infected with aids. >> on the eve of world aids day, officials are warning infection rate could get out of control unless action is taken. >> but as a new report just issued by the united nations shows, there is encouraging news. there's been a large reduction in the amount of new cases in southern africa. >> education campaigns and easier access to medicines have paid off in the battle against hiv. the number of people newly i
in spain, 26% were one in two young people is out of work. things are not quite that grim in italy, but more and more young people are looking for work. the youth unemployment rate is 36%, the highest since june 2004. >> we have to take a short break, but when we back, december 1 is world aids day. we will be taking a look at the problem of hiv/aids. >> and what is germany going to do with all its nuclear waste? stay with us for that. >> thanks for staying with us. >>...
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Dec 31, 2012
12/12
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CSPAN
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in a decade prior to 2007, spain had been the booming economy of europe. at one stage during the previous decade, nearly half the jobs created in europe were in spain alone. that brought in a huge amount of immigration. now we're seeing the other side of that. which is the immigrants have lost their jobs and the workers have lost their jobs. and in spain also there was a difference between those with permanent contracts with strong employment protection and the great bulk of people who are being employed on what's being called temporary contracts. they chopped down. we haven't seen that in the u.k. where the unemployment really hasn't reason as a result of such a deep downturn. >> is that the key factor siven given that we have had unrest in the past in bad economic times? do you think this time it's the unemployment figures that have made the difference? >> it clearly made a big difference because it shared the burden where whole industries would be wiped out or close to wiped out like the coal and steel industries in the 1980's. there there was a focus f
in a decade prior to 2007, spain had been the booming economy of europe. at one stage during the previous decade, nearly half the jobs created in europe were in spain alone. that brought in a huge amount of immigration. now we're seeing the other side of that. which is the immigrants have lost their jobs and the workers have lost their jobs. and in spain also there was a difference between those with permanent contracts with strong employment protection and the great bulk of people who are...
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Dec 30, 2012
12/12
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KRCB
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already half of the young people in spain are unemployed. as a result, some spanish girls are even willing to risk their health to earn a little money on the side. >> it was not an easy decision, but anna has decided to become a paid a donor. she will help infertile women become mothers. in return, she will receive 750 euros per donation. that is a lot of money for the chemistry student. >> it is not a regular monthly income, but it is enough to help the family that urgently needs money. in my case, i needed to pay the registration fee so that i can keep wking towary maer's degree. >> donating eggs is legal, and an increasing number of women in spain are doing it, including here. the clinics pay up to 900 compensation and expenses for the examinations, hormone treatment, and egg extraction. anna needs the money. though she is 26, she is almost too old. this clinic is looking for even younger donors, and it has plenty of applicants to choose from. >> every day, we get calls from two or three women who want to donate eggs. we now have a list o
already half of the young people in spain are unemployed. as a result, some spanish girls are even willing to risk their health to earn a little money on the side. >> it was not an easy decision, but anna has decided to become a paid a donor. she will help infertile women become mothers. in return, she will receive 750 euros per donation. that is a lot of money for the chemistry student. >> it is not a regular monthly income, but it is enough to help the family that urgently needs...
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those stories and others on our website at the moment thousands of people have hit spain's streets to protest against the government's ever growing a stir people are outraged by cuts to health care education and pensions with anger also directed at changes to labor laws there's now talk to crisis strategist. he was saying coordinated action across the whole of spain thousands on the streets angry at the government's policies just how realistic are the protesters demands. there are unrealistic because spain is the eurozone especially as euro zone is on the path to insolvency and one could argue that spain is one of the countries that is essentially broke if not in actual fact so i think it led to the cut and have to start cutting somewhere because the debts are just breaking the spanish economy and it's going to get worse so my sense is spain has been living for too many years with too mild many benefits to get people shut social benefits social programs that are simply untenable in the long term and now that we have had this economic downturn that have shown up the fact that the euroz
those stories and others on our website at the moment thousands of people have hit spain's streets to protest against the government's ever growing a stir people are outraged by cuts to health care education and pensions with anger also directed at changes to labor laws there's now talk to crisis strategist. he was saying coordinated action across the whole of spain thousands on the streets angry at the government's policies just how realistic are the protesters demands. there are unrealistic...
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people in spain say their dignity is at stake a little later this hour on how pension a student has in their thousands protesting against government sturdy across the country. also come time for action in the wake of the newtown tragedy the u.s. president is ready to back a ban on assault weapons the details on that and plenty of other stories after this break. if you just love me enough and knows that to ride a horse you've got to. catch it first. for him it's a daily routine that just softens a force on the island of a horn at the heart of. his life on an isolated farm is about blue sky green grass and horses what sometimes it gets lonely here but horses have become part of me now i've fallen off so many times sometimes. it's part of my every day like. i home suburban home rats like me just laugh for centuries most still live off the end of cattle and fish. if my call is often called the pearl of siberia and i said to be the pearl of by. it's all end of think forests. and vast staps. virtually undiscovered by tourists until some twenty years ago i haunt us quickly becoming a magnet f
people in spain say their dignity is at stake a little later this hour on how pension a student has in their thousands protesting against government sturdy across the country. also come time for action in the wake of the newtown tragedy the u.s. president is ready to back a ban on assault weapons the details on that and plenty of other stories after this break. if you just love me enough and knows that to ride a horse you've got to. catch it first. for him it's a daily routine that just softens...
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i mean why should the richest part of spain pay for the rest of the country if they want to be on their own. well we put a question another way around the way why don't they feel they have to share their solidarity with other parts of the country i mean you can't reproduce the argument . within these stateless nations as well and the poorest part of catalonia i mean sustained by the roots aspire of petroleum i think this is part to partially a wishful thinking i mean and it has to do with the legitimisation of the political system on the line hand and with a shot at radicalization of nationalist demands on the other hand which actually can not to be separated from the presence of course those that are particularly affected by konami overall economic crisis and well what i really i'm really skeptical about the possibilities of determination to short term or to solve the real problems of people from get the loan from the legion from the basque country i think that normative problem we have to face is that how the studly which is the barrier or what is the worry or a referendum or the peop
i mean why should the richest part of spain pay for the rest of the country if they want to be on their own. well we put a question another way around the way why don't they feel they have to share their solidarity with other parts of the country i mean you can't reproduce the argument . within these stateless nations as well and the poorest part of catalonia i mean sustained by the roots aspire of petroleum i think this is part to partially a wishful thinking i mean and it has to do with the...
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the international monetary fund have imposed on greece spain and portugal and ireland over the last two years the demand for austerity is precisely the reason that youth unemployment as you said in greece is now around fifty percent and approaching similar levels in much of the rest of southern europe it's the e.u. this being the problem here it's not being part of the solution in any way just one is about significance in to what is this president's been saying does it perhaps suggest there are political cracks in brussels here we have a top official being openly critical of the rest of europe. i mean there are always political cracks in brussels and across europe you have a group of countries that will agree on some things but won't agree on everything and when you start to push them together when they start to end up in a deep economic crisis it's also a crisis of institutions of course they start to squabble and that's what we've seen over the last few years no real agreement on what to do next because everyone has their own somewhat divergent interests and that's germany doesn't wan
the international monetary fund have imposed on greece spain and portugal and ireland over the last two years the demand for austerity is precisely the reason that youth unemployment as you said in greece is now around fifty percent and approaching similar levels in much of the rest of southern europe it's the e.u. this being the problem here it's not being part of the solution in any way just one is about significance in to what is this president's been saying does it perhaps suggest there are...
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countries to build their work chest to go after countries that are bigger so now they're going after spain italy and the u.k. and the u.k. is a country that's you know here to cover the destruction of the u.k. being destroyed by other bankers and they can do so and that they're discouraging huge multi hundred billion pound fines from these bankers are going into the u.s. banking system purges on for exactly the reasons we've been talking about now for a number of years there's nobody here to defend the city there's nobody here to defend the people austerity measures are being imposed in more of draco nian fashion social unrest is about to explode on a massive scale can hardly wait and this whole thing is ready to blow it's also part of a racket you know here that is britain who is played poodle too like the al capone of the global financial and military industrial complex system and now al capone's turning on them when they're all sots but al capone in this case the u.s. regulators they won you know the u.k. to basically hire their cousin vinny because the article notes that the u.k. banks
countries to build their work chest to go after countries that are bigger so now they're going after spain italy and the u.k. and the u.k. is a country that's you know here to cover the destruction of the u.k. being destroyed by other bankers and they can do so and that they're discouraging huge multi hundred billion pound fines from these bankers are going into the u.s. banking system purges on for exactly the reasons we've been talking about now for a number of years there's nobody here to...
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terms that they get when it is a crisis roughly the same time and then now this crisis has spread to spain and italy and now it's spread to the u.k. but the u.k. as you're saying is not a position has a much what's the debt to g.d.p. ratio in the u.k. it's as bad as ireland right it's not quite as bad as island yet but within that i've got to say that we're doing something that i think is quite hankie which is by transferring the quantitative easing balance to the treasury account we are doing something that's tantamount to monetizing that that you know it's a by hand you mean dodgy all very good by dodgy you mean underhanded in scoundrel like i think hard to ask you know could i you know i'm going to be a little that's a little by little bit less diplomatically than i would usually put it but. it's a no no that i think we've course the line on going so you don't you move to up the dummy's economics for dummies so to explain walk through what's what the osborne has done over there the bank of england would be just taking on the interest to tell the people what's going on ok so what we've d
terms that they get when it is a crisis roughly the same time and then now this crisis has spread to spain and italy and now it's spread to the u.k. but the u.k. as you're saying is not a position has a much what's the debt to g.d.p. ratio in the u.k. it's as bad as ireland right it's not quite as bad as island yet but within that i've got to say that we're doing something that i think is quite hankie which is by transferring the quantitative easing balance to the treasury account we are doing...
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Dec 31, 2012
12/12
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they could not sell directly to france or hollander spain. there were -- they did not like the junk there were sent back in trade. you could not have a currency in the colonies. you basically had to cobbling together from various sources. you had to get the gold or silver from the spanish caribbean or somewhere else. you had to issue certain types of notes that colonies were allowed to issue. but basically your whole currency was not really there. so businesses was hard to conduct. they were anxious to expand to the west with settlements. the king was trying to stop anybody from going over the appalachians. so they had a different set of concerns of than new england. >> what do you think would be the reaction on part of the people who lived back then to what we see now of the british monarch and the family? >> it turns out, of course, it is not as if we have a monarchy here, but you have so much interest in the royal family, it is kind of hard to believe that the revolution was designed to get rid of the king and the royal family. because the
they could not sell directly to france or hollander spain. there were -- they did not like the junk there were sent back in trade. you could not have a currency in the colonies. you basically had to cobbling together from various sources. you had to get the gold or silver from the spanish caribbean or somewhere else. you had to issue certain types of notes that colonies were allowed to issue. but basically your whole currency was not really there. so businesses was hard to conduct. they were...
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Dec 5, 2012
12/12
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this at a time when the unemployment rate in spain is 26%, in france it is almost 11%, and across the whole eurozone it is almost 12%. employment, already at a record high, is set to go on rising each year of the forecast, and for every one job less in the public sector, two new jobs are expected to be created in the private sector. britain now has a greater proportion of its people in work than either the eurozone or the united states of america. mr. speaker, more jobs means that the impact of the weaker than forecast gdp on the public finances have been less than some might have expected. there have been three developments that have each had a significant one-off impact on the public finances, and in the report today we publish clearly and transparently the impacts of all three. first, there is the transfer of the royal mail pension fund to the public sector at part of its privatization. this produces a one-off reduction in the deficit of 28 billion pounds this year, but it adds to the deficit in the years afterwards. second, the previous goth had class -- government had classified
this at a time when the unemployment rate in spain is 26%, in france it is almost 11%, and across the whole eurozone it is almost 12%. employment, already at a record high, is set to go on rising each year of the forecast, and for every one job less in the public sector, two new jobs are expected to be created in the private sector. britain now has a greater proportion of its people in work than either the eurozone or the united states of america. mr. speaker, more jobs means that the impact of...
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Dec 31, 2012
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to get the markup that they could have gotten if they could sell it directly to france, holland or spain or wherever. they did not like the job they were sent back in the trade. they felt put upon. you cannot have a currency in the colonies. you basically have to cobble together from various sources. you had to get gold or silver from the spanish caribbean or somewhere else. you had to issue certain types of notes the colonies were allowed to issue. basically, your whole currency was not really there. so business was hard to conduct. the virginians felt put upon economically, very much. there were anxious to expand to the west with settlements. the king was trying to stop anybody from going over the appalachian mountains. so they had a different set of concerns that new england said. >> what would be the reaction on the part of people that lived back then to what we see now of the british monarchs and the family? >> it turns out that it's not as if we have a minority here, but you have so much interest in the british royal family that it's hard to believe the revolution was designed to g
to get the markup that they could have gotten if they could sell it directly to france, holland or spain or wherever. they did not like the job they were sent back in the trade. they felt put upon. you cannot have a currency in the colonies. you basically have to cobble together from various sources. you had to get gold or silver from the spanish caribbean or somewhere else. you had to issue certain types of notes the colonies were allowed to issue. basically, your whole currency was not really...
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Dec 11, 2012
12/12
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., spain, and italy. today the four rates are very different. ours has fallen markedly. rates have come in a great deal. i was -- that was the first pillar. the second is that policy would provide the vehicle for accommodating the stimulus to the economy. fiscal policy would be a head wind in terms of the movement of total demand. monetary policy would be accommodative and more importantly, would accommodate the sharp fall in the sterling exchange rate which had taken place between the end of 2007 and the beginning of 2009. that was a 25% fall in the average effective exchange rates of sterling against other currencies. the biggest since the second world war. and the monetary policy was to make sure that that gain in competitiveness was retained by ensuring that domestically generated inflation would remain stable. these pillars were thought to be consistent with the gradual recovery of the economy. what happened was we did not get a gradual recovery. we saw output being broadly flat over the past 2.5 years. it has been a zigzag pattern. we have had the excitement of the
., spain, and italy. today the four rates are very different. ours has fallen markedly. rates have come in a great deal. i was -- that was the first pillar. the second is that policy would provide the vehicle for accommodating the stimulus to the economy. fiscal policy would be a head wind in terms of the movement of total demand. monetary policy would be accommodative and more importantly, would accommodate the sharp fall in the sterling exchange rate which had taken place between the end of...
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Dec 29, 2012
12/12
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WRC
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a town in southeast spain is cleaning up after revelers battled it out with flour, eggs, and -- wait for it -- firecrackers. the annual flour/egg/firecracker fight takes place on december 28 and celebrates spain's equivalent of april fool's day. to recap, that is flour, eggs, and firecrackers. jud . >> do they combine? >> yeah, like bisquick a la requirecrackers. >> some story meetings -- >> maybe next year. >> maybe. we'll see. >> thanks. >>> dylan dreyer has a check of the national forecast. good morning. >> good morning to you guys. yeah, talking about snow in the northeast. rain in the southeast. and right smack dab in the middle of the country, >>> snow will continue coming east. expect your snow chance prior to noon today. after that, it's rain. all the precipitation ending about 3:00 today. take a look because some folks are saying, where's the snow? it's west of us now between now and 9:00. that line will come to the east. we will be getting some snowfall in here, but only for about three or four hours. amounts pretty light. an inch, maybe just over that in montgomery county.
a town in southeast spain is cleaning up after revelers battled it out with flour, eggs, and -- wait for it -- firecrackers. the annual flour/egg/firecracker fight takes place on december 28 and celebrates spain's equivalent of april fool's day. to recap, that is flour, eggs, and firecrackers. jud . >> do they combine? >> yeah, like bisquick a la requirecrackers. >> some story meetings -- >> maybe next year. >> maybe. we'll see. >> thanks. >>> dylan...
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Dec 27, 2012
12/12
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CSPAN
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to get rid of the deficit states from the united states, like there are in europe and portugal and spain and everywhere else that happens to be in deficit. the reason is, the federal- state, especially after 1929 plays the role of the regulator of surplus and deficit recycling around the land. let me give you a simple example. we are in seattle. boeing is sponsoring the lectures. when boeing goes to washington to give a contract for the next generation jet or whatever, they may get it. they do get it. but there are some things attached. like for instance, we want a factory that builds the wings are the engines in tennessee or missouri or arizona. in the deficit regions. this is not philanthropy. this is an act of recycling surplus so the surpluses of the surplus state can continue to be created, produced. you may recall that in the 1920s, internationally, we had a gold standard. fixed exchange rates. it is like having a single economy. that gold standard creates a a degree of growth, together with the emergence of state corporations like edison that allows the bankers to run riot, to bri
to get rid of the deficit states from the united states, like there are in europe and portugal and spain and everywhere else that happens to be in deficit. the reason is, the federal- state, especially after 1929 plays the role of the regulator of surplus and deficit recycling around the land. let me give you a simple example. we are in seattle. boeing is sponsoring the lectures. when boeing goes to washington to give a contract for the next generation jet or whatever, they may get it. they do...
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Dec 29, 2012
12/12
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WBAL
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a town in southeast spain is cleaning up after revelers battled it out with flour, eggs, and -- wait for it -- firecrackers. the annual flour/egg/firecracker fight takes place on december 28 and celebrates spain's equivalent of april fool's day. to recap, that is flour, eggs, and firecrackers. jud . >> do they combine? >> yeah, like bisquick a la requirecrackers. >> some story meetings -- >> maybe next year. >> maybe. we'll see. >> thanks. >>> dylan dreyer has a check of the national forecast. good morning. >> good morning to you guys. yeah, talking about snow in the northeast. rain in the southeast. and right smack dab in the middle of the country, it looks nice and sunny. it will be cold. temperatures only in the 20s and 30s. we are looking again at most areas in the northeast around one to three inches. we're not talking about a lot of flag or a lot of wind -- flooding or a lot of wind. southeastern massachusetts will be a jackpot area where we could end up with about six to nine inches of snow. the southeast will see the rain mostly through this morning. it will be heavy at times
a town in southeast spain is cleaning up after revelers battled it out with flour, eggs, and -- wait for it -- firecrackers. the annual flour/egg/firecracker fight takes place on december 28 and celebrates spain's equivalent of april fool's day. to recap, that is flour, eggs, and firecrackers. jud . >> do they combine? >> yeah, like bisquick a la requirecrackers. >> some story meetings -- >> maybe next year. >> maybe. we'll see. >> thanks. >>> dylan...
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Dec 28, 2012
12/12
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FOXNEWSW
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we have to do is look over the pond and see what's happening in countries like greece and italy and spain and ireland have these massive debt. now we cannot repay them, massive interest-rate increases, you and i have talked about this before. but shame on us for not realizing that we stay on this path, we are in real financial trouble. gregg: stephen moore, economics writer for "the wall street journal." on her way to the fiscal cliff. thank you very much. heather: russian president vladimir putin accused of playing politics with the lives of orphans. signing a bill banning americans from adopting russian children. bad news has left dozens of american families heartbroken. amy kellogg is live in london with details. reporter: heather, one russian activist says that every member of the russian parliament voted for this measure should be obliged to adopt a russian child of his or her own. there are 700,000 russian children who need a home. only 18,000 russian families who signed up to adopt. this new law was named after a russian baby that died in the custody of his american adoptive parent
we have to do is look over the pond and see what's happening in countries like greece and italy and spain and ireland have these massive debt. now we cannot repay them, massive interest-rate increases, you and i have talked about this before. but shame on us for not realizing that we stay on this path, we are in real financial trouble. gregg: stephen moore, economics writer for "the wall street journal." on her way to the fiscal cliff. thank you very much. heather: russian president...
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Dec 3, 2012
12/12
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CNBC
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spain same story. so when you bnk our package and what's been offered so are far which appears like $1.6 trillion in tax hikes against $400 billion of entitlement cuts over time, that's an even worse mix than the two-thirds/one-third european structure that really has gotten a negative reaction. >> how much is because of the mix and how much of it just this is what austerity looks like? >> is the money in capping deductions or raising marginal tax rates? it's in capping deductions. but that's tough because you have to tell someone no like the housing lobby or charitable contributions. >> capping deductions seems line the easiest. >> it should be, but remember, you'll have lobbyists pushing you on it. so that's tougher decision rather than raising taxes on one small part of the population and then on the spending side, making those long term spending cuts is the only way of stabilizing debt. the sink guegle biggest driver medicare. so if we don't make those tough decisions now, all we've done is a europ
spain same story. so when you bnk our package and what's been offered so are far which appears like $1.6 trillion in tax hikes against $400 billion of entitlement cuts over time, that's an even worse mix than the two-thirds/one-third european structure that really has gotten a negative reaction. >> how much is because of the mix and how much of it just this is what austerity looks like? >> is the money in capping deductions or raising marginal tax rates? it's in capping deductions....
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Dec 5, 2012
12/12
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. ♪ impact wool exports from new zealand, textile production in spain, and the use of medical technology in the u.s.? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex, global economy. it's just one reason over 75% of our mutual funds beat their 10-year lipper average. t. ro price. invest with confidence. request a prospectus or summary prospectus with investment information, risks, fees and expenses to read and consider carefully before investing. nespresso. where i never have to compromise on anything. ♪ where just one touch creates the perfect coffee. where every cappuccino and latte is only made with fresh milk. and where the staff is exceptionally friendly. ♪ nespresso. what else? >> >> brian: he dreamed of blowing up 10 synagogues in new york city. he will now spend 10 years behind bars and then deported. he got the sentence in exchange for pleading guilty. he could have gotten 32 years or if they asked me to be on the jury . it is that time of year again, the crib making its annual come back. of applause in the control room. it returns on december 17th. as long as t
. ♪ impact wool exports from new zealand, textile production in spain, and the use of medical technology in the u.s.? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex, global economy. it's just one reason over 75% of our mutual funds beat their 10-year lipper average. t. ro price. invest with confidence. request a prospectus or summary prospectus with investment information, risks, fees and expenses to read and consider carefully before investing. nespresso. where i never have to...